The Large Hadron Collider Just Identified 5 New Subatomic Particles

The Large Hadron Collider Just Identified 5 New Subatomic Particles

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the latest addition to CERN’s accelerator complex, is the most powerful particle accelerator ever built. It features a 27-kilometre (16-mile) ring made of superconducting magnets and accelerating structures built to boost the energy of particles in the chamber.

In the accelerator, two high-energy particle beams are forced to collide from opposite directions at speeds close to the speed of light.

The energy densities that are created when these collisions occur cause ordinary matter to melt into its constituent parts – quarks and gluons. This allows us to interrogate the basic constituents of matter – the fundamental particles of the Standard Model.

It is a project of massive, unparalleled proportions.

More than 10,000 scientists and engineers are currently working together to help us learn about the fundamental properties of physics using the LHC.

Each of the five particles were found to be excited states of Omega-c-zero, a particle with three quarks. These particle states are named, according to the standard convention, Ωc(3000)0, Ωc(3050)0, Ωc(3066)0, Ωc(3090)0 and Ωc(3119)0.

Now, the researchers need to determine the quantum numbers of these new particles, and their theoretical significance.

This will all add to our understanding of the correlation between quarks, and multi-quark states, which will further the way we comprehend our Universe and quantum theory in general.

Ultimately, CERN called this “a hotbed of new and outstanding physics results”.

And it’s just the beginning. More experiments and results are on their way.

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This is why the importance of international collaborations cannot be overstated. The LHC is the largest international scientific collaboration in history (scientists from more than 85 countries are involved in the LHC and its experiments at the European laboratory CERN).

As such, perhaps it is no surprise that it is leading to a new era in physics and opening new doors in our understanding of the Universe, in fact, it could even prove the existence of higher dimensions.

Over the coming months and years, the LHC will use its amazing amount of energy to open up the “dark sector of physics”, revealing currently unknown particles and helping solve some of our greatest cosmic mysteries (such as dark matter, parallel dimensions, and what happened during the earliest moments of the Big Bang).

With new updates coming to the LHC, the team promises “even more impressive” physics opportunities.